Shout out to all those resisting exploitation, resource extraction and the state here on Vancouver Island, Sunshine Coast and Lower Mainland.

A crew of autonomous musicians, anarchists, organizers and and general trouble makers are kicking off a tour this July to connect with you. We’re looking to build solidarity and relationships so that together we can stand strong in the face of the industrial Hydra of Fracked Gas, Pipelines, LFG Liquification Facilities, Clearcuts, Tankers and destroy that which destroys us.

Check out our tour dates to see if we’re coming to your community and get in touch if you want to organize a show, workshop, bbq, raucous or to get your hands on some of the publications we be distroing.

Chains and padlocks greeted workers at the constituency offices of two B.C. Conservative MPs Tuesday, as opponents of the Enbridge Northern Gateway pipeline called for the politicians to “vacate their posts.”

The Port Moody office of Industry Minister James Moore and the North Van office of MP Andrew Saxton were targeted by a citizens’ group calling itself “Settlers on Stolen Land.”

The protesters locked the doors and posted notices on the office windows that outlined three reasons for their actions:

Like this:

Imperial Metals attempted to do a “community presentation” in the Secwepemc community of Neskonlith, near Chase, BC, on June 16, 2014, but were shut down by opponents of the company’s proposed Ruddock Creek mine.

Like this:

TransCanada open house in Hazelton, BC, disrupted by protesters, June 18, 2014.

by Derrick, West Coast Native News, June 19th, 2014

Opponents of Enbridge’s Northern Gateway project spent the day after its conditional approval from Ottawa waging war on several fronts, Taking Direct action, using civil disobedience, legal action, and persuasion to further the message that the $7.9-billion pipeline should not be built.

Nine people staged a sit-in at Conservative MP James Moore’s B.C. constituency office Wednesday to voice their opposition to the project. Four were arrested after they refused to leave, but were quickly released by police and not taken into custody.

“We feel that Stephen Harper, along with James Moore, have a democratic duty to respect the convictions of Canadians and British Columbians who have said no,” Elle-Maija Tailfeathers, one of the protesters who left on her own accord, said in an interview.

[Unist’ot’en Territory – near Smithers, BC] Amid threats of a raid and impending pipeline approvals, the Unist’ot’en Clan of the Wet’suwet’en Nation are prepared to continue to defend their territories against the incursion of government and industry. A soft blockade was erected in 2009, which remains today, to insure that pipeline projects which violate Wet’suwet’en Law would not trespass onto Wet’suwet’en territories to develop projects without their consent.